esearchers at Northwestern University
Medical School have found that a chemical in red wine believed to help reduce
risk for heart disease is a form of estrogen. The substance, resveratrol,
is highly concentrated in the skin of grapes and is abundant in red wine.
Moderate consumption of red wine has
been widely reported to reduce risk for cardiovascular disease. Some researchers
have attributed this cardioprotective quality to the significant amounts
of resveratrol naturally present in grape skin.
Resveratrol protects grapes and some
other plants against fungal infections. It has been shown previously to
have a number of potentially beneficial properties, including antioxidant,
anticoagulant, anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effects.
Resveratrol has a molecular structure
similar to that of diethylstilbestrol, a synthetic estrogen. This prompted
Barry D. Gehm, J. Larry Jameson, M.D., and colleagues at Northwestern to
investigate whether resveratrol might have pharmacologic properties similar
to those of estradiol, the major natural human estrogen.
As reported in the Dec. 9, 1997, issue
of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the group's
laboratory studies showed that resveratrol is estrogenic. (Specifically,
it is a phytoestrogen, from the Greek word for "plant.") At concentrations
similar to those required for its other biological effects, resveratrol
activated expression of both artificially introduced "reporter"
genes and naturally occurring estrogen-regulated genes in cultured human
cells. The researchers also found that resveratrol could replace estradiol
in supporting the proliferation of certain breast cancer cells that require
estrogen for growth.
"Estrogen" is not a specific
compound but a category of substances defined by their biological effect.
Originally named for their ability to induce estrus ("going into heat")
in animals, estrogens act on cells by binding to a protein called estrogen
receptor, which then causes certain genes to be expressed, or "turned
on." In addition to the body's sex hormones, a number of other natural
and artificial estrogens are known.
|